An archive of articles and listserve postings of interest, mostly posted without commentary, linked to commentary at the Education Notes Online blog. Note that I do not endorse the points of views of all articles, but post them for reference purposes.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Putting Bloomberg on Trial

Educating for Democracy: The People's Trial of Mayor Bloomberg

Shortly after Mayor Michael Bloomberg assumed control of the
New York City school system, he presented his programs as a national
leader in "educational reform." But there has been evidence in the New
York public schools in the recent past of cheating on standardized tests by teachers and supervisors.
Moreover, the much publicized "success" of the mayor's program has been in part based on
inflated test scores and the "dumbing down" of the tests themselves.
Yet under the mayor's "leadership" Bloomberg continues to close down
"failing" schools and replace them with charter schools causing
wide-spread disruption to students, parents and veteran teachers. As a
result of these closings, some of the most valuable and experienced
teachers lose their positions and end up in "ATR" (Absent Teacher
Reserve) where they are misused as substitute teachers with no permanent
position since the principals are reluctant to hire high-salary
veterans and prefer to employ cheaper, inexperienced teachers to meet
their "bottom line." This is the business model of education that the
Bloomberg Administration has imposed.
At a "trial" held at DC 37 of AFSCME (American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees sponsored by the Coalition for Public
Education forpubliced.org and
hosted by Sam Anderson, a noted educational leader dedicated to wresting
the school system out of mayoral control, testimony was given by dozens
of parents, teachers and concerned educators describing the negative
effect the mayor's "educational reform" has produced in what seems to be
a part of a nationwide attempt to privatize the public schools,
deskill teachers, strip them of their union rights, and firmly establish
a two-tier educational system: one for the privileged and one for
everyone else.

The all-day trial was adjudicated by such well-known legal authorities
as Thomas Mariadson, of the Asian-American Legal Defense Fund, Esmeralda
Simmons, of the Center for Law and Social Justice, Damon Hewitt of the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund and attended by City Councilman Charles Barron.
Angel Gonzalez, a member of GEM (Grassroots Education Movement)
described in detail the destructive effect of school closings in which a
disproportionate number of Black and Latino students are pushed out of
their neighborhood schools to accommodate charter schools. This process
not only results in damage to the students but a disproportionate number
of Black and Latino teachers end up as ATR's further diminishing the
ethnic diversity of the system. Among other results of the co-location
of charter schools in district schools is that they-the charters- cut
back on needed programs in bi-lingual and special needs education.

Another aspect of the damage the Bloomberg administration has done to
the NYC public schools was revealed by a teacher-parent whose daughter
goes to Bronx Regional High School, the school attended by Nicole
Suriel, the girl who was tragically drowned on a class beach visit last
summer. The parent testified that he had repeatedly warned the school
administration and Department of Education of neglect and indifference
to student well-being at the school and blames the Administration for
fostering this negligent attitude that resulted in the girl's death.

The teacher also reported the conditions at the GED Plus school where
he teaches which is located at Bronx Regional High School. The school
is intended to offer a chance for high school dropouts ages 17-21, to
get their General Education diplomas. However, according to the
teacher's testimony, the school has no library, no arts programs, no
gym, no special literacy program, no ELL for students whose first
language is not English, and 35 in a class.

There were many other charges of mismanagement of the public schools
by the Bloomberg administration. These included the dismissal of a
twelve-year special ed veteran when the DOE discovered she hadn't taken a
foreign language course in college; the excessive number of summonses
and arrests of students of color where not only security personnel but
also regular police with firearms patrol the former Brandeis High
School. It had once been one of the best high schools in the City but
was closed down so that a charter school can be "co-located" at the
facility on the Upper West Side where the workers and teachers will be
non-unionized. The testimony throughout the time I attended presented a
consistent pattern of inadequate attention to and neglect of schools
that desperately need more support.

And while these schools are "failing," Councilman Barron reported that
during the period of the Bloomberg administration's control of the
schools the DOE budget has increased from $11 billion to $24 billion
while only 23% of the students graduating from the public schools are
prepared for college. With a great many of the services for the city
schools now "contracted out," Barron wonders where so much of this money
is going with so little effect on improving public education.

At the same time, as pointed out by Leonie Haimson, a nationally known
parent-advocate and Executive Director of Class Size Matters, a
clearinghouse for information on class size, the actual number of
students in classrooms K-12 has increased under the Bloomberg
administration, despite the fact that $650 million each year for the
past three were specifically appropriated by the State legislature under
the Contracts for Excellence law to reduce class size. Moreover,
Haimson pointed out that several programs that have no research to
support them are being vigorously expanded under the Mayor's watch:
paying students for improving test scores and increasing the use of
on-line (computer-based) instruction.

An alternative to such destructive practices was offered at the
hearing in an ICOPE (Independent Commission on Public Education) video
created by a group of high school students who actually asked other
students what they felt would improve their schools. The video, based on
a study called YRNES (Youth Researchers for a New Education System) www.ICOPE.org
found that in addition to wanting to be treated with greater respect by
teachers and other staff, about 80% of those students questioned
expressed an interest in participating in leadership roles in their
school. Perhaps if other school administrators, besides the Mayor,
heeded the students' request, there might be some marked improvement in
their performance in learning.

If the "Trial of Mayor Bloomberg" showed anything, it was that his
programs were more expensive, more destructive, and more demoralizing
with no significant improvement in learning outcome than prior to his
administration. The sentence for what he's done is that he should be
dismissed from his position as head school administrator so that more
positive outcomes can be produced for our City's young learners:
student, parent and teacher-based, not business-based education.

1 comment:

Thank you for posting this. The media blocked out this important trial / conference.

Another blocked out conference was one at Bank Street last month on school closings: “Effective Alternatives to School Closings: Transforming Struggling Schools in NYC,” organized by the Coalition for Educational Justice, the Alliance for Quality Education, and the Urban Youth Collaborative.

Counter

About Me

Norm Scott worked in the NYC school system from 1967 to 2002, spending 30 of those years teaching elementary school in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn (District 14). He retired in July 2002. He has been active in education reform and in the UFT, often as a critic of union policy, since 1970, working with a variety of groups. In 1996 he began publishing Education Notes, a newsletter for teachers attending the UFT Delegate Assembly. In 2002, he expanded the paper into a 16-page tabloid, printing up to 25,000 copies distributed to teacher mailboxes through Ed Notes supporters. Education Notes started publishing a blog in Aug. 2006. Norm also writes the School Scope education column for The Wave, the Rockaway Beach community newspaper.